@JayeNM - I know you, and others, have wondered about the origin of the Olds Super and whereas it seems to me from research that Martin
and Buescher were variously used by Olds to manufacture some of their other saxophones I had a thought relating to the thumb rest photos above... bear with me...
Now, on the SOTW thread (
Here's something interesting for some of you (Olds).... ) I commented that the Olds Studio looks to me like a Martin Imperial due partly to the l/h pinkie key shown again under...
IF the Studio is a Martin Stencil then we next look at the octave thumb rest in my post above and see the Studio's is the same as the Super's. Follow that through and you may conclude that if the Studio was a Martin then, with an identical thumb rest, so was the Super.
But of course Olds may have got the Imperials, in parts, from Martin and added the thumb rest as an embellishment as they did with the ring in the Studio's bell brace, and the extra rollers in its pinky keys.
In that case the Super may have come from another source, or have been made by Olds themselves, and had the same thumb rest added when they came to think about that area of their weird new sax.
I did note that on
@helen's site, she said of her Super:
- "David—who BTW is Swiss, and trained as a woodwind instrument maker before moving to Canada in the late 80s—noted that this entire instrument is handmade. While he was cleaning the keys, he noted he could see hammer strikes on the keys, and the hand-buffing marks on them. This speaks to the fact that this horn was not made by Martin. Yes, Olds may have employed former Martin employees in its design and creation, but this is not a fancied-up Martin Committee II like so many people seem to want to believe."
Source:
The Olds Super tenor sax is home
Will we ever have a final answer as to where the Super was made?
Meanwhile... I'm trying to find any photos or info on the Olds Recording sax. Anyone?
